Polishing of Small Composite Semiconductor Materials

ABSTRACT

A device includes a crystalline material within an area confined by an insulator. A surface of the crystalline material has a reduced roughness. One example includes obtaining a surface with reduced roughness by using a planarization process configured with a selectivity of the crystalline material to the insulator greater than one. In a preferred embodiment, the planarization process uses a composition including abrasive spherical silica, H 2 O 2  and water. In a preferred embodiment, the area confined by the insulator is an opening in the insulator having an aspect ratio sufficient to trap defects using an ART technique.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/080,779 filed Jul. 15, 2008, inventor Jennifer Hydrick and James Fiorenza, entitled “POLISHING OF SMALL COMPOSITE SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIALS”, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to planarization for semiconductor structures or device fabrication.

2. Description of the Related Art

This section provides background information and introduces information related to various aspects of the disclosure that are described and/or claimed below. These background statements are not admissions of prior art.

Integration of lattice-mismatched semiconductor materials is one path to high performance devices such as complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) field-effect transistors (FET) due to their high carrier mobility. For example, the heterointegration of lattice-mismatched semiconductor materials with silicon will be useful for a wide variety of device applications. One heterointegration method involves creation of confined regions of lattice-mismatched semiconductor materials on a silicon substrate. However, planarization is typically required for device fabrication. Chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) of the selected lattice-mismatched semiconductor materials is an option to smooth the surface of the material. Low material removal rates are needed, and creation of dishing or surface impurities must be avoided. Thus, there exists a need to planarize a surface of lattice-mismatched materials in a confined or selectively grown area (e.g., an active region of crystalline materials).

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Embodiments according to the present invention provide compositions, methods and apparatus to planarize confined mismatched material suitable for device fabrication and/or devices made thereby.

In one aspect, one embodiment of the invention can provide planarized regions (e.g., wafers) with reduced or minimal dishing and/or overpolish of the heteroepitaxial regions.

In another aspect, one embodiment of the invention is to provide planarized regions with reduced or low levels of metallic contamination.

An aspect of one embodiment of the invention is to provide a lattice-mismatched crystalline material with a reduced surface roughness.

In yet another aspect, an embodiment of a CMP process can planarize confined mismatched crystalline material (e.g., by an insulator) suitable for device fabrication.

In yet another aspect of the invention, compositions such as slurries provide polish selectivity for heteroepitaxial regions or materials relative to the confining regions or insulators.

In yet another aspect, an embodiment of a CMP process can planarize a Ge—SiO₂ composite structure produced by Ge growth in SiO₂ trenches on a Si wafer.

In an alternative aspect, one embodiment the invention is provided to planarize a crystalline material/insulator combination.

In yet another aspect of the invention, planarized heteroepitaxial regions are selected to provide designated characteristics corresponding to a resulting device.

These aspects may be especially applicable to devices incorporating ART techniques, including but not limited to a mixed signal application device, a field effect transistor, a quantum tunneling device, a light emitting diode, a laser diode, a resonant tunneling diode and a photovoltaic device. The ART devices may have crystalline material epitaxially grown in openings or confined areas with an aspect ratio (depth/width)>1, or otherwise suitable for trapping most defects.

Additional aspects and utilities of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

These and/or other aspects and utilities of the present general inventive concept will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, of which:

FIG. 1, comprising FIGS. 1(a)-1(c), respectively illustrate (a) cross-sectional TEM image of defect trapping in ART structure (e.g., 200 nm trenches of Ge) where a lattice-mismatched material region above the dashed line has reduced defects, (b) schematic of proposed device structure showing trapped defects, and (c) an alternate configuration (e.g., confined area for crystalline material) of an ART structure.

FIG. 2 illustrates exemplary oxide removal rates as a function of slurry concentration, oxide removal rates for slurry mix with various chemical additive conditions, and Ge removal rates as a function of slurry concentration using no additives.

FIG. 3 illustrates Ge and SiO₂ removal rates determined for slurry mixes containing NaOCl additive at low Nalco 2360 concentrations.

FIG. 4 illustrates cross-sectional SEM images of Ge ART sections of different trench widths polished with 1.4% NaOCl and 4.7% Nalco 2360 in the slurry mix.

FIG. 5 illustrates Ge removal rates determined for slurry mixes containing NH₄OH additive. Minimum oxide polish rate indicated.

FIG. 6 illustrates cross-sectional SEM images of Ge ART sections polished with 2.8% NH₄OH and 4.6% Nalco 2360 in the slurry mix (polished despite vibration).

FIGS. 7 illustrates Ge and SiO₂ removal rates determined for slurry mixes containing H₂O₂ additive with additional detail for a low concentration range (at right).

FIG. 8 illustrates cross-sectional SEM images of Ge ART sections of different composite structures polished with 0.16% H₂O₂ and 35% Nalco 2360 in a slurry mix.

FIG. 9 illustrates comparison of Ge and oxide removal rates and selectivities for slurry mixes with different additive chemicals.

FIG. 10 illustrates concentration of selected metallic elements at the wafer surface for diluted slurry-additive combinations post-CMP, with comparative data for an oxide CMP process on the same equipment and an evaluation of NaOCl on a wafer without polishing. Data is all from the front-side of the wafer. No data shown for a given metal indicates that the level for that metal was below detection limits of the VPD-ICP-MS analysis.

FIG. 11 comprising FIGS. 11(a)-11(b) illustrate cross-sectional SEM images of germanium structure before (a) and after (b) CMP with H₂O₂ additive in a slurry mix.

FIG. 12 comprising FIGS. 12(a)-12(b) illustrate pitting observed in plan-view SEM for (a) a Ge blanket film that was polished with 10% H₂O₂ in a slurry mix and (b) an overpolished Ge ART sample that was polished with 5% H₂O₂ in a slurry mix.

FIG. 13 shows 2 μm×2 μm AFM scan of an exemplary Ge ART sample polished with 0.16% H₂O₂ in the slurry mix that resulted in 30 nm of dishing and RMS roughness measured in the Ge area of 0.21 nm.

FIG. 14 comprising FIGS. 14(a)-14(b), illustrate (a) SEM image of significant dishing in Ge ART sample at 5% H₂O₂ (b) TEM image of Ge ART sample polished using one slurry mix embodiment.

FIG. 15 illustrates Ge thickness, dishing, and overpolish for thin coalesced and uncoalesced Ge ART wafers including four different patterned areas polished in a slurry mix embodiment for different times.

FIG. 16 is a flowchart that illustrates an embodiment of a method for making a semiconductor device having a planarized surface.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Reference will now be made in detail to the embodiments of the present general inventive concept, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout. The embodiments are described below in order to explain the present general inventive concept by referring to the figures.

The formation of lattice-mismatched materials has many practical applications. For example, heteroepitaxial growth of group IV materials or compounds, and III-V, III-N and II-VI compounds on a crystalline substrate, such as silicon, has many applications such as photovoltaics, resonant tunneling diodes (RTD's), transistors (e.g., FET (which can be planar or 3D (e.g., finFET), HEMT, etc.), light-emitting diodes and laser diodes. As one example, heteroepitaxy of germanium on silicon is considered a promising path for high performance p-channel metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) field-effect transistors (FET) and for integrating optoelectronic devices with silicon complementary MOS (CMOS) technology. Heteroepitaxy growth of other materials (e.g., of group III-V, III-N and II-VI compounds and other group IV materials or compounds) also is beneficial for these and other applications.

However, the dislocation density of the epitaxially grown material can be unacceptably high for many applications. For example, the dislocation density of germanium directly grown on silicon can be as high as 10⁸-10⁹ cm⁻² due to the 4.2% lattice mismatch between the two materials—unacceptable for most device applications. Various approaches to reducing the defect density have been pursued, including compositional grading, and post-epi high-temperature annealing. However, these approaches may not be optimal for integration with silicon-based CMOS technology due to requirements for thick epi-layers and/or high thermal budgets, or due to incompatibility with selective growth at a density suitable for CMOS integration.

Aspect Ratio Trapping (ART) is a defect reduction technique that mitigates these problems. As used herein, “ART” or “aspect ratio trapping” refers generally to the technique(s) of causing defects to terminate at non-crystalline, e.g., dielectric, sidewalls, where the sidewalls are sufficiently high relative to the size of the growth area so as to trap most, if not all, of the defects. ART utilizes high aspect ratio openings, such as trenches or holes, to trap dislocations, preventing them from reaching the epitaxial film surface, and greatly reduces the surface dislocation density within the ART opening.

FIG. 1a shows a cross section of a lattice-mismatched material 140 of high quality above a defect region 155 using ART. As illustrated here, a crystalline material 140 is epitaxially grown on substrate 100 (here, for example, on the (001) surface of a silicon substrate). By confining the crystalline growth within an opening 120 (e.g., trench, recess or the like) with a sufficiently high aspect ratio (e.g., 1 or greater, 0.5 or greater), defects 150 formed while epitaxially growing the crystalline material 140 travel to and end at the sidewalls (e.g., insulator sidewalls) 110. Thus, the crystalline material 140 continues to grow without the continued growth of the defects 150, thereby producing crystal with reduced defects. This technique has been shown to be effective for growing low defectivity materials such as Ge, InP and GaAs selectively on Si in trenches 200-450 nm wide and of arbitrary length—an area large enough for devices such as a FET, for example. Such trenches can be wider or narrower.

An embodiment of the invention is directed to a device including a planarized lattice-mismatched material in an opening in an insulator. FIG. 1b shows one example, illustrating a perspective view of a portion of an exemplary device. As shown in FIG. 1b , the example includes a crystalline material 140 grown on a substrate 100 in an opening 120 defined in an insulator 130 for a non-Si channel MOSFET. The substrate 100 may be a crystalline material such as silicon, Ge or sapphire. Insulator 130 is preferably a non-crystalline material such as a dielectric material including silicon nitride or SiO₂. The crystalline material 140 at least at some stage has a surface above the top surface of insulator 130. A planarized surface can include at least a surface of portions of the crystalline material 140 corresponding to source, drain and gate regions of the device.

In one example, the width of the opening 120 may be 400 nm or less, 350 nm or less, 200 nm or less, 100 nm or less or 50 nm or less; these sizes have been shown to be effective for ART (of course these sizes do not need to be used with ART). Alternatively, the width of the opening may be 5 μm or less. In another alternative, the width of the opening may be 1 μm or less. The opening may be formed as a trench (with the length of the trench running front to back as shown in FIG. 1b ) in which case the width would be considered to be perpendicular to its length and height. The length of the trench may be arbitrary. Alternatively, the length of the trench may be substantially larger than the width of the trench, for example greater than 10 times larger, or greater than 100 times larger. In one example, the length of the trench is 2 μm.

It is preferred, but not necessary, that the opening 120 is used to trap defects when epitaxially growing the crystalline material 140 using ART (aspect ratio trapping) techniques. (Aspect ratio “AR” is defined for trenches as the ratio of the trench height/trench width.) In such a case, the aspect ratio may be greater than 1, although it possible for the aspect ratio to be lower in ART devices, for example 0.5. In one embodiment, the crystalline material 140 can include two different semiconductor materials or more than one semiconductor material (e.g., GaAs/InP/InGaAs) such as or first, second and third materials where the first material can be Ge or GaAs, can be less than 100 nm or can have bonding characteristics to a substrate and the third material is polished. Further details of example ART devices and ART techniques in which this invention may be incorporated may be found in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/436,198 filed May 17, 2006, Ser. No. 11/493,365 filed Jul. 26, 2006 and Ser. No. 11/852,078 filed Sep. 7, 2007, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference.

The substrate 100 in the above examples may include a group IV element or compound, such as germanium and/or silicon, e.g., (001) silicon. The crystalline material 140 may include at least one of a group IV element or compound, a III-V or III-N compound, or a II-VI compound. Examples of group IV elements include Ge, Si and examples of group IV compounds include SiGe. Examples of III-V compounds include aluminum phosphide (AlP), gallium phosphide (GaP), indium phosphide (InP), aluminum arsenide (AlAs), gallium arsenide (GaAs), indium arsenide (InAs), aluminum antimonide (AlSb), gallium antimonide (GaSb), indium antimonide (InSb), and their ternary and quaternary compounds. Examples of III-N compounds include aluminum nitride (AlN), gallium nitride (GaN), indium nitride (InN), and their ternary and quaternary compounds. Examples of II-VI compounds includes zinc selenide (ZnSe), zinc telluride (ZnTe), cadmium selenide (CdSe), cadmium telluride (CdTe), zinc sulfide (ZnS), and their ternary and quaternary compounds.

The layer of insulator need not be formed as a substantially planar layer. For example, the insulator may be formed of a thin layer that conforms to an undulating surface of the substrate on which it is created. FIG. 1c illustrates an example including a substrate that has openings/recesses/trenches 120 etched into the substrate 100. An insulating layer 180 has been formed across the substrate 100 conforming to the surface topography of the etched substrate 100. The insulating layer 180 is configured at the bottom of the openings/trenches to expose portions 160 of the substrate 100 for subsequent lattice-mismatched crystalline material. In this case, sidewalls of the insulator 190 can be formed by deposition on or oxidation of the substrate 100 and are not formed by a separate photolithography process. Exemplary configurations of the trenches 120 and portions 160 are illustrated however, embodiments of the invention are not intended to be so limited, for example, as other linear, tiered or nonlinear cross-sections may be used for the trenches 120 and the portions 160.

The following description in connection with FIGS. 2-15 describes examples of how surfaces of the lattice-mismatched semiconductor material or crystalline material within a confined space (e.g., crystalline material 140 within insulator 130) may be planarized or provided with a prescribed surface smoothness. Although this description is in connection with specific materials and process parameters, it will be apparent that the description is exemplary only, and should not be considered to limit embodiments of the invention to such materials and process parameters.

Exemplary CMP embodiments according to the invention for planarizing Ge—SiO₂ composite structures produced by Ge growth in SiO₂ trenches on a Si wafer will now be described. Embodiments of CMP processes can produce flat and/or co-planar planarized regions (e.g., Ge regions or Ge/insulator regions) suitable for device fabrication including reduced roughness, low dishing and/or overpolish of such regions and low levels of contamination. A slurry mix can include part abrasive, part chemical additive, and the remaining liquid or de-ionized (DI) water, adding up to 100% of the slurry mix. In one embodiment, the addition of H₂O₂ to a diluted colloidal slurry was determined to provide desired results including selectivity, step height, reduced surface roughness and low resulting contaminants in composite structures.

The following materials and process parameters were used for Ge grown as discussed in connection with FIGS. 2-15. The starting substrates used in this work were crystalline silicon, 200 mm diameter, p-type, and (001) oriented. A 500-nm-thick thermal oxide was grown on the substrate. The oxide layer was patterned into trenches along [110] direction of the silicon substrate having 180-350 nm width and 13 mm length. The trenches were formed using conventional photolithography techniques and a reactive ion etching (RIE) step. The patterned substrates were then cleaned in Pirana, SC2, and dilute HF solutions sequentially. Removal of fluorocarbon residues caused by RIE was accomplished using a 25-nm-thick sacrificial oxidation and subsequent HF oxide etch. The final trench height was 490 nm after this cleaning procedure. Undoped Ge layers were selectively, epitaxially grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on the exposed Si substrate (either in the trenches or on a blanket Si substrate (e.g., a bare Si wafer)) in an industrial ASM Epsilon E2000 system. This CVD system is a horizontal, cold-wall, single wafer, load-locked reactor with a lamp-heated graphite susceptor in a quartz tube. Directly prior to growth, the substrates were cleaned in a diluted HF solution and rinsed in DI (deionized) water. The substrates were loaded into the growth chamber and baked in H₂ for 1 minute at 870° C. The pressure during the bake was set the same value as used in the subsequent growth step, 80 Torr. The growth step used a 30 sccm germane (GeH₄) source gas flow diluted to 25% in a 20 slm hydrogen carrier gas flow. The Ge growth was performed in two steps; the first step is at 400° C. for 540 sec and the second step is at 600° C. for a time period of 1200-7000 sec. Selected samples for CMP were uncoalesced, while other samples were grown to coalescence above the oxide trenches.

Experimental Results

For the experimental results described below, CMP was performed on these 200 mm wafers on either a Strasbaugh 6EC or an IPEC 472 CMP tool with a spiral k-groove IC1000-Suba IV stacked pad, a 3M S60 diamond conditioner, and variable concentrations of Nalco 2360 slurry (70 nm colloidal silica). Nalco 2360 slurry is a commercially available colloidal silica polishing slurry having submicron silica particles in an aqueous solution. Either 6% NaOCl, 30% NH4OH, or 30% H2O2 solution was added to the diluted slurry to enhance the Ge removal rate. Thus, each slurry mix consisted of part Nalco 2360, part chemical additive, and the remainder was deionized water (DI) water, adding up to 100% of the slurry mix. Concentration percentages listed beyond this point refer to the fraction of Nalco 2360, NaOCl solution, NH4OH solution, H2O2 solution, or DI water in the slurry mix. Exemplary concentration ranges of the chemicals tested in the slurry mix were 0-2.4% of NaOCl, 0-100% NH4OH, and 0-10% H2O2. Polish conditions for the Strasbaugh 6EC tool follow. Before CMP, the pad break-in is accomplished with 5 lbs applied, 50 rpm conditioner speed, 65 rpm table speed, 200 mL/min of DI water, 25 sweeps of the conditioner arm (back and forth), and 36 seconds/complete sweep. A precondition step was used to spread slurry over the table at the beginning of each run, using parameters 5 lbs applied, 150 mL/min of slurry mix, 20 rpm conditioner speed, 20 rpm table speed, 2-5 center-to-edge sweeps, and 11 seconds/partial sweep. The CMP process included 10 seconds of ramp-up, a polish step, and 25 seconds of ramp-down and rinse steps. Polishing time for the polish step was varied, and in-situ sweep pad conditioning of 5 lbs (22 sec/complete sweep) was used throughout the CMP process. The down-force during the polish step was 3 PSI, slurry feed rate 150 mL/min, table speed 45 rpm, and wafer chuck speed 41 rpm. Automatic hydro-load and polish were used for all samples, and back pressure and ring force were optimized as needed. The table is cooled by building cooling water, and table temperature varied between 60-85° F. during polishing. Wafers polished with the IPEC 472 CMP tool used similar conditions.

The post-CMP clean, using the Verteq Goldfinger single-wafer megasonic post-CMP tool, consisted of a contamination spin-off, 60 sec process time, 30 sec rinse time, and 30 sec spin dry time. Megasonic power of 125 W was used for all samples. Only DI water (1.7-3 L/min) was used for most Ge and Ge ART samples, while a diluted standard clean 1 (SC-1) solution was used in the megasonic clean for all wafers with an oxide film. The concentration of the SC-1 solution was 50 mL/min NH4OH (30%) and 100 mL/min H2O2 (30%) in 1.7-3 L/min of DI water. Wafers which were polished on the IPEC 472 CMP were cleaned using an OnTrak brush scrubber.

Evaluation of the material removal rate (RR) was based on CMP of blanket oxide and Ge films on Si. Pre-CMP and post-CMP film thicknesses were measured by interferometry (Filmetrics) or ellipsometry (Sopra). Endpointing of the patterned ART samples was achieved initially by visual and optical microscope inspection, and later by calibrating CMP process time with cross-sectional scanning electron microscope (SEM) analysis. However, alternative known endpointing techniques may be used. The patterned sample thicknesses after polishing were measured in an Amray 3300FE or Zeiss Supra 40 field-emission SEM. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) samples, prepared by mechanical polishing and Ar ion milling, were observed in a JEOL JEM 2100 TEM. VPD-ICP-MS was used to measure the level of metallic contamination on the surface of bare silicon or blanket oxide wafers after CMP.

Experimental slurry investigation included slurry mixtures of diluted Nalco 2360 alone and respectively combined with either NaOCl, NH₄OH, or H₂O₂ tested for suitability for CMP of Ge (e.g., confined Ge). Results for each slurry mixture are described separately first; followed by combined selectivity and metals data. Factors analyzed can include at least selectivity, removal rate, and planarized surface characteristics such as smoothness, dishing, overpolish, step height and post-CMP surface metallic contamination levels. One preferred polishing rate ratio (selectivity) is Ge faster than SiO₂ or Ge:SiO₂ selectivity at least>1:1. Another preferred target Ge:SiO₂ selectivity was about 1-10:1. Another preferred target Ge:SiO₂ selectivity was about 3-5:1.

As shown in FIG. 2, the removal rate of diluted Nalco 2360 slurry was tested. Wafers were polished with Nalco 2360 slurry diluted with de-ionized (DI) water. The CMP removal rates were determined for slurry mixtures with concentrations of Nalco 2360 varying from 4.5% to 100%. FIG. 2 illustrates oxide SiO₂ removal rates as a function of slurry concentration and for various chemical additives.

Ge polished using no additives is illustrated in FIG. 2 for comparison to diluted Nalco 2360 slurry in the slurry mix. FIG. 2 illustrates exemplary Ge RR data at 100% and 0% Nalco 2360. As shown in FIG. 2, the Nalco 2360 concentration alone does not significantly affect the Ge polish rate 220, but oxide RR 210 is directly related to the amount of Nalco 2360 in the slurry mix.

Exemplary results for oxide RR 210 using slurry and oxide RR using slurry with additives indicate Nalco 2360 concentration is the major factor controlling the oxide RR in all slurry mixes. While the oxide removal rates for wafers polished with additives appear to have some effect on the oxide RR as shown in FIG. 2, the effect appears to follow the same general trend as a slurry mix without additives, at least for the concentrations tested. Thus, Nalco 2360 concentration is the major factor controlling the oxide RR. Using diluted slurry alone, the preferred selectivity of Ge faster than SiO₂ was not achievable for any concentrations because of vibration (described below).

The Nalco 2360 slurry chosen for testing was intended to be selective in polishing Ge rather than SiO₂. As shown in FIG. 2, an increasing oxide RR and a relatively constant Ge RR can result in selectivity>1 for Ge:SiO₂ at low concentrations of slurry (e.g., a slurry mix with approximately <20% slurry). An unexpected result of the Nalco 2360 choice was significant CMP tool vibration when polishing oxide wafers with slurry mixes containing low concentrations of Nalco 2360 in DI water. A slurry mix containing below approximately 35% Nalco 2360 slurry generated debilitating vibration of the CMP tool and experimentally a preferred selectivity of Ge removal faster than SiO₂ was not achievable.

Although the Nalco 2360 slurry was successfully used experimentally, embodiments of the invention are not intended to be so limited. For example, particle size can range between 20-90 nm, 50-90 nm or 50-70 nm may be used. Such particles may be spherical. Thus, colloidal or fumed slurry may be used. In addition, embodiments of a slurry mix can operate with a pH range between 7-10, however, any pH sufficient for particles to remain in suspension in a slurry mix can be used. Further, although colloidal silica particles were used experimentally, alternative materials for slurry particles (e.g., abrasives) can include ceria (e.g., CeO₂) or alumina (e.g., Al₂O₃). Alternative slurry mix can use particles of similar size. Although these do not oxidize semiconductor crystalline materials (e.g., Ge) during CMP as silica does, the functional operation of an abrasive can be sufficient in embodiments of a slurry mix according to the invention. According to one embodiment, semiconductor crystalline materials that exhibit water soluble oxidation can enhance polishing characteristics of a CMP process. Exemplary slurry mix according to one embodiment is preferred to not significantly polish or not to polish the insulator (e.g., dielectric, silicon nitride or SiO₂) confining the lattice-mismatched semiconductor crystalline materials. Thus, in one embodiment, a slurry mix with diluted Nalco 2360 achieved oxide RR below 70 nm/minute without CMP tool vibration. According to one embodiment, a lubricant can be used to reduce vibration during CMP, however, consideration (e.g., additional cleaning procedures) should be made to reduce contaminants that can be added by exemplary lubricants.

FIG. 3 illustrates exemplary Ge and SiO₂ removal rates determined for slurry mixes containing NaOCl additives at low Nalco 2360 concentrations. The incorporation of up to 2.4% NaOCl in the diluted Nalco 2360 slurry mix increases the Ge RR 310, as shown in FIG. 3. The NaOCl-additive experiments were run at ˜4.5% Nalco 2360 and the tool vibration was not observed. Tool vibration was not observed while using NaOCl in the slurry mix.

Although vibrations were not observed during CMP testing with NaOCl additives, significant vibrations were seen upon switching to NH₄OH and H₂O₂ additives. These vibrations are believed to be caused by high levels of friction between the wafer and the pad for some slurry mixtures. In addition, the vibrations were evident only when polishing oxide films, and not when polishing Ge films.

NaOCl is believed to act as an additional lubricant at the wafer-pad interface, while the NH₄OH and H₂O₂ do not. Experimentally, minimum Nalco 2360 concentrations of 30-35% were necessary to eliminate vibrations using NH₄OH and H₂O₂ additives. Such vibrations prevented CMP testing the SiO₂ polish rate for low Nalco 2360 concentrations, and also in slurry mixes containing NH₄OH and H₂O₂ additives. Additional spherical colloidal silica particles in the slurry mix appear to moderate the friction at the oxide-CMP pad interface.

FIG. 4 illustrates exemplary results using cross-sectional SEM images of Ge ART sections of different trench widths polished with 1.4% NaOCl and 4.7% Nalco 2360 in the slurry mix. As shown in FIG. 4, the trench widths vary from approximately 200 nm to 400 nm. Cross-sectional SEM results in FIG. 4 illustrate significant dishing at 1.4% NaOCl. While overpolish is evident in FIG. 4 as well, the level of dishing on this sample is unacceptably high (e.g., for device fabrication).

FIG. 5 illustrates exemplary Ge removal rates determined for slurry mixes containing NH₄OH additives. As shown in FIG. 5, the slurry mixes containing NH₄OH additives were experimentally tested at a minimum oxide (SiO₂) removal rate of 70 nm/min 510 at 30% Nalco 2360 in the slurry mix to avoid unacceptable tool vibration.

Adding NH₄OH to the diluted Nalco 2360 slurry did not enhance the Ge RR significantly. As shown in FIG. 5, NH₄OH concentrations below 10% with diluted slurry nor 100% NH₄OH alone appreciably affected the Ge RR for the respective slurry mix. With oxide removal rates at a level to avoid vibration, a preferred selectivity of Ge faster than SiO₂ was not experimentally achievable for any NH₄OH concentrations in the slurry mix.

FIG. 6 illustrates exemplary results using cross-sectional SEM images of Ge ART sections of different trench widths polished with 2.8% NH₄OH and 4.6% Nalco 2360, where the Ge RR should have been higher than the oxide RR (oxide RR could not be measured at this low slurry concentration because of vibration). The sample shown in FIG. 6 was polished despite vibrations, but polishing could not regularly occur using the slurry mix because of the vibration of the CMP tool. Dishing is also apparent in FIG. 6.

FIG. 7 illustrates Ge and SiO₂ removal rates determined for exemplary slurry mixes containing H₂O₂ additives. Additional detail of Ge and SiO₂ removal rates 710 determined for exemplary slurry mixes having a low concentration range between 0 and 0.3% H₂O₂ is shown to the right. As shown in FIG. 7, slurry mix with low concentrations of H₂O₂ (e.g., >0.05%) polishes Ge selectively to SiO₂ even with 35% Nalco 2360 slurry in the slurry mix to avoid vibration. Further, an oxide removal rate 720 did not vary significantly up to 5% H₂O₂.

FIG. 8 illustrates exemplary results using cross-sectional SEM images of Ge ART sections polished with 0.16% H₂O₂ and 35% Nalco 2360 in the slurry mix. As shown in FIG. 8, dishing and overpolish are acceptable in these pattern areas. In addition, overpolishing requirements can be controlled by endpointing to a specific pattern of interest.

FIG. 9 illustrates a comparison of exemplary oxide and Ge removal rates and selectivity determined for slurry mixes with the different additive chemicals. The graph is intended to show comparison of removal rates and Ge/SiO₂ selectivity only, and therefore, slurry and additive concentrations are not the same. In FIG. 9, the data presented (left-to-right) for each slurry mix is SiO₂ RR 910, Ge maximum RR 920 and Ge minimum RR 930. As illustrated in FIG. 9, the addition of H₂O₂ to the diluted slurry provided results sufficient for device fabrication and the best results based on the selectivity and/or dishing (e.g., see SEM results described above).

In addition to removal rate and selectivity, each of the primary three diluted slurry-additive combinations was tested for concentration of selected metallic elements at the wafer surface post-CMP. Wafer surfaces post-CMP were tested for more than 25 contaminant materials and collected data 1010, 1020, 1030 is respectively shown in FIG. 10. In addition, FIG. 10 illustrates data for an oxide CMP process 1040 performed on the Strasbaugh CMP (e.g., for comparison to the H₂O₂ data 1010 and NH₄OH data 1020) and data 1050 for a wafer exposed to NaOCl and rinsed. As shown in FIG. 10, NH₄OH added to the slurry mix has the lowest metals levels of the three additives.

Further, high metals in data 1050 observed on a wafer after exposure to NaOCl show that the levels on a wafer post-CMP can be caused by contamination from the NaOCl solution. Such high levels of contaminant metals (and dishing observed when using NaOCl additive) in the slurry mix are not acceptable for post-CMP device fabrication.

As shown in FIG. 10, some metals levels (e.g., Mg) for polishing with H₂O₂ in the slurry mix are higher than acceptable levels for post-CMP device fabrication, but this additive had the best performance in coplanar CMP. Such acceptable levels can be generally 5×10¹⁰/cm² or less. A cleaning step was devised to follow the megasonic post-CMP clean that included a DI water rinse and hydrofluoric acid (HF) dip. Ge may etch slightly in this cleaning step. After the water rinse and HF dip, metals levels were reduced to acceptable levels for samples polished with the H₂O₂-containing slurry mix.

From the exemplary experimental data, H₂O₂ was the chemical additive to the slurry mix with superior performance in terms of removal rate and selectivity (e.g., FIGS. 7 and 9), and contaminant or metals levels post-CMP (e.g., FIG. 10). A successful CMP planarization using an embodiment of a CMP composition according to the present general inventive concept is illustrated in FIG. 11(b). FIGS. 11(a) and 11(b) illustrate respective cross-sectional SEM images of germanium structure before and after CMP with H₂O₂ additive (here 0.16% H₂O₂) in the slurry mix.

According to embodiments of the invention, sufficient planarization results in the ability to implement the planarized lattice-mismatched semiconductor material or composite crystalline/insulator structure, which may be formed using ART techniques, in a semiconductor device. In one embodiment, dishing is preferably less than 50 nm, less than 30 nm, less than 20 nm or less than 10 nm. The surface smoothness can be measured by a surface roughness Rms (root mean square). Rms of the Ge in a Ge/oxide composite structure was calculated only on the Ge area and did not include the oxide. The overall Rms value can reflect variations of Ge surface height from one trench to another, within a trench or along the length of the trenches. In one embodiment, the surface roughness (Rms) is preferably less than 20 nm, less than 10 nm less than 5 nm, less than 3 nm, or less than about 1 nm, and may be less than 0.5 nm or less than 0.2 nm. In one embodiment, overpolishing is a significant concern for reduced device dimensions corresponding to the exemplary disclosed devices. In one embodiment, overpolishing is preferably less than 50 nm, less than 10 nm, less than 5 nm or less than 2 nm. In one embodiment, the step height is less than 30 nm, less than 20 nm, less than 15 nm or less than 10 nm. As illustrated in FIG. 11(b), exemplary results of CMP according to embodiments of the invention satisfy prescribed or required coplanar characteristics of the polished surface.

In addition, for CMP of Ge ART, a Ge:SiO₂ polish selectivity of about 5:1 is preferred. This exemplary selectivity can reduce or prevent significant overpolish or dishing. As described above, embodiments of a slurry mix using H₂O₂ were able to provide the prescribed selectivity.

Once slurry mix chemistry was determined (e.g., Nalco 2360, H₂O₂, and DI water), process and performance improvement for embodiments of the invention were tested (e.g., on the Ge ART samples). For example, embodiments of the invention were tested to determine the effects of H₂O₂ concentrations on removal rates for various compositions and process considerations for characteristic CMP results (e.g., a more effective CMP process). Additional factors to consider when evaluating removal rate data for various concentrations of H₂O₂ additive in the slurry mix include pitting and polish time. Dishing can increase when selectivity increases. In addition, removal rates that are too low can unduly increase polish time.

Pitera disclosed pitting occurred during CMP on Si/Ge material combinations when using H₂O₂, but avoided the problem by adding an additional oxide layer that was then polished using known CMP techniques. FIGS. 12(a) and 12(b) confirm such results for relatively high H₂O₂ concentrations. FIGS. 12(a) and 12(b) illustrate pitting 1210 in plan-view SEM for a Ge blanket film sample polished with 10% H₂O₂ in the slurry mix and trench Ge ART samples polished with 5% H₂O₂ in the slurry mix, respectively.

At one preferred concentration of 0.16% H₂O₂ in a slurry mix, pitting of the Ge surface was not detected. FIG. 13 illustrates a 2 μm×2 μm AFM scan of a Ge ART sample polished with 0.16% H₂O₂ in the slurry mix. In FIG. 13, dishing is 30 nm, and RMS roughness (of Ge areas in a Ge ART sample) measured by AFM is 0.21 nm. As shown in FIG. 13, decreasing concentration of H₂O₂ was able control or decrease pitting effects in CMP for Ge.

Dishing can vary with concentration of H₂O₂ in the slurry mix, ranging from unacceptable levels at high concentrations (e.g., over 5% H₂O₂ concentration) to ˜20-50 nm for 200-375 nm wide Ge ART trenches at 0.16% H₂O₂. FIGS. 14(a) and 14(b) respectively illustrate such differences post-CMP using an SEM image of an unacceptably dished sample (5% H₂O₂) and a TEM image of polished Ge ART at 0.16% H₂O₂, respectively.

Most of the samples presented here were used a post-CMP megasonic clean (except those polished using NaOCl additive in the slurry mix, because the equipment was not available at that time). Samples that required low metals also used a water rinse and HF dip (primarily used for samples that underwent additional processing post-CMP). The megasonic cleaning used SC-1 chemistry for all oxide wafers, but SC-1 chemistry was detected to etch Ge even at low concentrations (e.g., primarily caused by the H₂O₂). Since etching occurred even at low concentration, DI water only was then used in the megasonic clean for all the Ge samples (e.g., blanket film and Ge ART). The DI water-only megasonic clean was effective for slurry particle removal on the Ge samples, except where sample topography (for example incomplete planarization) prevented slurry from escaping the surface.

Effect of Coalescence on CMP

All of the post-CMP Ge ART samples described above used pre-CMP structures that coalesced over the oxide trenches during growth (e.g., see FIG. 11(a)). The selective Ge growth caused each of the patterned areas to have a different thickness of coalescence over the trenches, which leads to different elapsed polish times to reach coplanar Ge ART for each patterned area. However, the lattice-mismatched semiconductor materials (e.g., Ge) do not need to coalesce over the oxide trenches if a CMP process can effectively planarize uncoalesced crystalline growth above a top surface of the oxide trench. At the tested concentration of H₂O₂ (e.g., 0.16% H₂O₂) in the slurry mix, exemplary polish time for an uncoalesced Ge ART wafer to reach coplanar is typically less than a minute. However, a CMP process does not tend to reach a steady state until after about a minute of polish. Accordingly, control of a short process for the uncoalesced Ge ART could not be guaranteed in tested samples. In this situation, it may help that the SiO₂ patterning slows the polish rate as the structure begins to clear.

Initial investigations of the effect of coalescence on Ge ART CMP addressed coalescence effects on the clearing behavior of the structures during CMP, so polish controllability was not evaluated. Analysis of polished samples of “thin coalesced” and uncoalesced samples focused on dishing and overpolish as a function of polish time for four different patterned regions, for example, as shown in FIG. 15.

Combined data for several samples is presented in FIG. 15; thin coalesced samples are on the left side of the graph, uncoalesced on the right. Times listed at the bottom of the chart reflect the polish step; where two times are listed “X+Xsec”, two polishes were done on the sample. The original oxide pattern film thickness on this sample was approximately 490 nm. A 500 nm thickness reference point is illustrated in FIG. 15.

Exemplary Ge thickness, dishing, and overpolish for four different patterned areas (e.g., patterns A-D) of thin coalesced and uncoalesced Ge ART wafers polished in 0.16% H₂O₂-containing slurry mix for different times are shown in FIG. 15. The colored bars represent the resulting thickness of the Ge in the trenches (e.g., for a given patterned area and for a given wafer/CMP time) measured from the bottom of the oxide patterning to the bottom of any dishing that may have occurred. “Error bars” are used to show the level of the oxide post-CMP. If the error bar ends below the height of the Ge thickness bar, the Ge is under polished and some Ge remains above the patterned oxide. If the error bar ends above the height of the Ge thickness bar, the oxide height is greater than that of the Ge, and therefore the length of the error bar reflects the amount of dishing in the Ge. Finally, if the end of the error bar lies below the 500 nm horizontal line on the graph, the difference between the end of the error bar and the 500 nm line reflects how much overpolish occurred for that patterned area on that sample.

An enormous amount can be learned from the data presented in FIG. 15. First, comparing the thin coalesced vs. uncoalesced samples, it is interesting to note that the A section clears before the B section in uncoalesced, but the reverse is true for thin coalesced. Also, the amount of overpolish evident in thin coalesced sections C and D (before section A is completely cleared) is much more significant than that observed for the uncoalesced samples when all four sections are cleared. It seems that in order to more effectively clear all four sections without significant overpolish in any of the sections, polishing uncoalesced samples is better. For thin coalesced samples, after two one-minute polishes, section A is not yet cleared, while the film remaining in section D is rapidly approaching its dislocation trapping region. On the other hand, if the primary sections of interest for a given sample are C and D, the polish time for an uncoalesced sample would be extraordinarily short, and it would be better to polish from a thin coalesced sample. Only one of the samples tested here used an etching clean (e.g., low concentrations of H₂O₂ in the megasonic post-CMP clean), and it is clear that this sample had more significant dishing than the other samples shown. In addition, some difference can be observed between the two thin coalesced samples with similar polishing times (75 seconds in one polish and 60+15 seconds in two polishes). It seems from these two samples that the ramp-up and ramp-down steps in the CMP do polish a small amount.

Exemplary embodiments of planarized latticed mismatched material and insulator composite structures, CMP compositions and methods for using the same described above used undoped semiconductor material. However, the present general inventive concept can be applied to n-doped semiconductor materials or p-doped semiconductor materials at known concentration for devices such as those described above with similar CMP results. Further, in one embodiment a substrate can be a semiconductor polycrystalline material, semiconductor amorphous material or an insulator (e.g., glass).

Exemplary embodiments of planarized lattice-mismatched material and insulator composite structures, CMP compositions and methods for using the same described above used low removal rates. Such removal rates can be 400 nm/minute or less, 300 nm/minute or less, 200 nm/minute or less, 100 nm/minute or less to as low as 60 nm/minute.

A method embodiment for making a semiconductor device having a first crystalline material confined in recess defined by an insulator will now be described with reference to FIG. 16. The first crystalline material can have a top surface above the insulator. Initially, a first crystalline material confined in recess having prescribed dimensions defined by an insulator is provided.

After a process starts, planarize a surface of the first crystalline material of a composite first crystalline material/insulator structure to have a surface roughness RMS of less than 5 nm (operation block 1610). A planarization operation can include a CMP of the composite first crystalline material/insulator structure using a slurry mix having a selectivity>1 (e.g., a selectivity of 3-5:1) of the first crystalline material:insulator in a repeatable polishing sequence that results in a coplanar planarized surface of the first crystalline material and insulator.

Form an additional component of the semiconductor device within, at, on and/or over at least the planarized top surface of the first crystalline material (operation block 1620). In one embodiment, adjacent planarized surfaces of the insulator and the first crystalline material have dishing less than 20 nm.

Complete the semiconductor device (operation block 1630).

Exemplary embodiments of, CMP compositions and methods for using the same described above can be used to polish or planarize first and second material composite structures. One exemplary composite structure can be an insulator adjacent or confining a semiconductor crystalline material, semiconductor polycrystalline material or semiconductor amorphous material. Another exemplary composite structure can be an a first semiconductor crystalline material, first semiconductor polycrystalline material or first semiconductor amorphous material adjacent or confining a second semiconductor crystalline material, second semiconductor polycrystalline material or second semiconductor amorphous material provided the selectivity of the second material is greater than the first material in accordance with example embodiments. Exemplary first and second adjacent materials can have micron or submicron dimensions. In one embodiment, the second material dimension can be of any size.

In one embodiment the first crystalline material is a lattice-mismatched semiconductor material. In another embodiment, the first crystalline material has a coalesced top surface connecting first crystalline material from a plurality of adjacent recesses. In one embodiment, the recess is a hole, trench, or a plurality of trenches each having a prescribed cross-section. In one embodiment, the insulator has an opening to a substrate of a second crystalline material lattice-mismatched to the first crystalline material. In one embodiment, the first crystalline material confined in the recess defined by the insulator was formed using ART techniques. In one embodiment, the second crystalline material may include a group IV element or compound, such as germanium and/or silicon, and the first crystalline material may include at least one of a group IV element or compound, a III-V or III-N compound, or a II-VI compound. While exemplary embodiments may be effective for various materials like a group III-V compound or group IV material like silicon, oxidation during a CMP process may vary. Thus, polishing of materials including semiconductor crystalline lattice-mismatched materials where water soluble oxidation results can enhance polishing characteristics or interactions corresponding to a CMP process.

In an embodiment, a post-CMP clean of the planarized surface can be performed. The post-CMP clean can be a megasonic clean using DI water.

As described above, embodiments of CMP process can planarize lattice-mismatched materials and lattice-mismatched material/insulator composite structures effectively. Further, embodiments can planarize first material adjacent second material combinations for use in semiconductor device applications including incorporation with CMOS techniques, processes and devices. Embodiments of devices according to the application can include planarized composite structures. Embodiments according to the application can include CMP compositions. One embodiment of a CMP process can planarize Ge in oxide trenches on Si substrates generated by Aspect Ratio Trapping techniques. An exemplary slurry mix according to one embodiment included 35% colloidal silica sub-micron particles, 0.1%-0.3% H₂O₂ 30% solution, and DI water slurry mix to provide a desired combination of selectivity and post-CMP coplanar surface characteristics, for example using crystalline materials confined by insulators formed using ART techniques, and low surface metal contamination. One slurry mix embodiment and a post-CMP cleaning embodiment were used to polish a variety of coalesced and uncoalesced Ge ART samples to coplanar Ge—SiO₂. Embodiments of CMP process according to the invention can be used in heterointegration by ART techniques. Embodiments of CMP process can be used to create planarized areas of defect-free Ge on a Si wafer and devices created thereby. Such structures can be used for high mobility, non-Si channel MOSFETs for next generation CMOS and for a wide variety of other applications.

As noted above, this invention has a wide variety of applications. While not limited to ART technology, this invention has many applications within ART technology. For example, use of this invention may be used to create strained Ge over a SiGe alloy grown in an opening within an insulator. One or both of the Ge and adjacent microstructure may be polished in accordance with the invention and/or may have a surface of reduced roughness. A wide variety of devices may incorporate aspects of the invention. While not limiting to these devices, the invention may be particularly applicable to mixed signal applications, field effect transistors, quantum tunneling devices, light emitting diodes, laser diodes, resonant tunneling diodes and photovoltaic devices, especially those using ART technology. Application Ser. No. 11/857,047 filed Sep. 18, 2007 entitled “Aspect Ratio Trapping for Mixed Signal Applications”; application Ser. No. 11/861,931 filed Sep. 26, 2007 entitled “Tri-Gate Field-Effect Transistors formed by Aspect Ratio Trapping”; application Ser. No. 11/862,850 filed Sep. 27, 2007 entitled “Quantum Tunneling Devices and Circuits with Lattice-mismatched Semiconductor Structures”; application Ser. No. 11/875,381 filed Oct. 19, 2007 entitled “Light-Emitter-Based Devices with Lattice-mismatched Semiconductor Structures”; and application Ser. No. 12/100,131 filed Apr. 9, 2007 entitled “Photovoltaics on Silicon” are all hereby incorporated by reference as providing examples to which aspects of this invention may be particularly suited.

Any reference in this specification to “one embodiment,” “an embodiment,” “example embodiment,” etc., means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment can be included or combined in at least one embodiment of the invention. The appearances of such phrases in various places in the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment. Further, when a particular feature, structure, or characteristic is described in connection with any embodiment, it is submitted that it is within the purview of one skilled in the art to affect such feature, structure, or characteristic in connection with other ones of the embodiments. Furthermore, for ease of understanding, certain method procedures may have been delineated as separate procedures; however, these separately delineated procedures should not be construed as necessarily order dependent in their performance. That is, some procedures may be able to be performed in an alternative ordering, simultaneously, etc. In addition, exemplary diagrams illustrate various methods in accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure. Such exemplary method embodiments are described herein using and can be applied to corresponding apparatus embodiments, however, the method embodiments are not intended to be limited thereby.

Although few embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in these embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention. The foregoing embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects illustrative rather than limiting on the invention described herein. Scope of the invention is thus indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are intended to be embraced therein. As used in this disclosure, the term “preferably” is non-exclusive and means “preferably, but not limited to.” Terms in the claims should be given their broadest interpretation consistent with the general inventive concept as set forth in this description. For example, the terms “coupled” and “connect” (and derivations thereof) are used to connote both direct and indirect connections/couplings. As another example, “having” and “including”, derivatives thereof and similar transitional terms or phrases are used synonymously with “comprising” (i.e., all are considered “open ended” terms)—only the phrases “consisting of” and “consisting essentially of” should be considered as “close ended”. Claims are not intended to be interpreted under 112 sixth paragraph unless the phrase “means for” and an associated function appear in a claim and the claim fails to recite sufficient structure to perform such function. 

1. A structure comprising: a substrate comprising a first semiconductor crystalline material; a first material having an opening to the substrate; and a second semiconductor crystalline material within the opening in the first material and directly adjoining the first semiconductor crystalline material of the substrate, the second semiconductor crystalline material being lattice-mismatched with the first semiconductor crystalline material, top surfaces of the first material and the second semiconductor crystalline material being coplanar within 50 nm.
 2. (canceled)
 3. The structure of claim 1, wherein the second semiconductor crystalline material has a root mean square (RMS) surface roughness of 20 nm or less.
 4. The structure of claim 1, wherein the second semiconductor crystalline material has a RMS surface roughness of 0.5 nm or less.
 5. The structure of claim 1 further comprising: a device formed in the top surface of the second semiconductor crystalline material.
 6. The structure of claim 1, wherein the opening is a trench, a recess, or a hole.
 7. The structure of claim 1, wherein the second crystalline semiconductor material is a group III-V compound.
 8. The structure of claim 1, wherein the second crystalline semiconductor material is germanium.
 9. The structure of claim 1, wherein a surface of the substrate exposed in the opening is a (001) surface of the substrate, and wherein the substrate is a single crystal substrate.
 10. The structure of claim 1, wherein top surfaces of the first material and the second semiconductor crystalline material are coplanar within 10 nm.
 11. The structure of claim 1, wherein the substrate is configured with depressions in the substrate, and wherein the insulator overlies sides of a depression to form said opening.
 12. A method comprising: defining an opening through an insulator to a substrate; forming a semiconductor crystalline material within the opening, the opening having an aspect ratio sufficient to trap defects in the semiconductor crystalline material; and planarizing top surfaces of the insulator and semiconductor crystalline material to be coplanar within 50 nm.
 13. The method of claim 12, wherein after planarizing, the top surfaces of the insulator and semiconductor crystalline material are coplanar within 10 nm.
 14. The method of claim 12, wherein the semiconductor crystalline material has a root mean square (RMS) surface roughness of 20 nm or less.
 15. The method of claim 12, wherein the semiconductor crystalline material has a RMS surface roughness of 0.5 nm or less.
 16. The method of claim 12 further comprising: etching the substrate to create a depression in the substrate; and forming the insulator over the substrate and conforming to the depression to create a sidewall from an outer surface of the insulator.
 17. A method comprising: defining an opening through an insulator to a substrate; forming a semiconductor crystalline material within the opening, the opening having an aspect ratio sufficient to trap defects in the semiconductor crystalline material; and planarizing top surfaces of the insulator and semiconductor crystalline material by using a chemical mechanical polishing using a slurry having a selectivity ratio of semiconductor crystalline material to insulator that is greater than 1:1.
 18. The method of claim 17, wherein the slurry comprises sub-micron slurry particles, a chemical additive solution, and water.
 19. The method of claim 17, wherein the slurry comprises a hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) solution.
 20. The method of claim 17 further comprising: cleaning the insulator and the semiconductor crystalline material after the planarizing, the cleaning comprising using a hydrofluoric acid (HF) dip.
 21. The method of claim 17, wherein after the planarizing, the top surface of the semiconductor crystalline material has a root mean square (RMS) surface roughness of less than 20 nm and has dishing less than 50 nm. 